Mario's Face (lost Nintendo DS tech demo; 2004): Difference between revisions
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{{InfoboxLost | {{InfoboxLost | ||
|title=<center>Mario's Face</center> | |title=<center>Mario's Face (DS tech demo)</center> | ||
|image=Mario's Face.jpg | |image=Mario's Face.jpg | ||
|imagecaption=A screenshot of the tech demo. | |imagecaption=A screenshot of the tech demo. | ||
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | |status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span> | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''''Mario's Face''''' was a Nintendo DS tech demo that was developed by Nintendo EAD and shown at E3 2004 to display the capabilities of Nintendo's then new system. | '''''Mario's Face''''' was a Nintendo DS tech demo that was developed by Nintendo EAD and shown at E3 2004 to display the capabilities of Nintendo's then-new system. | ||
The player could select Mario or Wario and then use the stylus on the touch screen, grab parts of Mario/Wario's faces, and pull and stretch them, similar to the ''Super Mario 64'' title screen and, to a lesser degree, the ''Mario Party'' "Face Lift" minigames. This feature was also put into ''Super Mario 64 DS'', albeit in a far simpler form. | The player could select Mario or Wario and then use the stylus on the touch screen, grab parts of Mario/Wario's faces, and pull and stretch them, similar to the ''Super Mario 64'' title screen and, to a lesser degree, the ''Mario Party'' "Face Lift" minigames. This feature was also put into ''Super Mario 64 DS'', albeit in a far simpler form. | ||
This particular demo hasn't been shown since its E3 presentation and has not been dumped online. | This particular demo hasn't been shown since its E3 presentation and has not been dumped online. | ||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
[[File:Mario's_Face_Wario.jpg|thumb| | {{Video|perrow =2 | ||
|service1 =youtube | |||
|id1 =ynrPVTnO5uk | |||
|description1 =Video of the tech demo. | |||
|service2 = | |||
|id2 = | |||
|description2 =[[File:Mario's_Face_Wario.jpg|thumb|200px|center|Wario's face being stretched.]] | |||
}} | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[BS Super Mario Collection (partially lost Satellaview broadcast versions of compilation platformer; 1997-1998)]] | |||
*[[Mario Artist (lost builds of unreleased Nintendo 64DD games; 1999-2000)]] | |||
*[[Mario's Castle (lost build of cancelled game on Nintendo's "Project Atlantis" handheld console; existence unconfirmed; 1995-1998)]] | |||
*[[Mario Demo (lost Virtual Boy tech demo; 1994)]] | |||
*[[Mario Motors (lost build of unreleased Nintendo DS racer; early 2000s)]] | |||
*[[Mario Kart XXL (lost Game Boy Advance tech demo; 2004)]] | |||
*[[Mario Takes America (lost build of cancelled Philips CD-i edutainment game; 1992-1994)]] | |||
*[[New Super Mario Bros. (lost early builds of Nintendo DS 2D platformer; 2004-2006)]] | |||
*[[New Super Mario Bros. Mii (lost Wii U tech demo; 2011)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario 128 (lost build of cancelled GameCube/Wii game; 2000-2006)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario 64 (partially found Spaceworld '95 demo of Nintendo 64 3D platformer; 1995)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Bros. 3 (lost Japanese prototype of NES platformer; 1987-1988)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Bros. (lost Commodore 64 port of NES platformer; existence unconfirmed; 1986)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Disk Version aka "Super Mario 64DD" (found unreleased Nintendo 64DD port of 3D platformer; 1999)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Galaxy (lost beta builds of Wii platformer; 2006-2007)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Kart R (partially found pre-release version of "Mario Kart 64"; 1995)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario RPG 2 (lost pre-release version of "Paper Mario" Nintendo 64 role-playing game; late 1990s)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario Spikers (lost build of cancelled Wii volleyball-wrestling sports game; 2007)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario's Wacky Worlds (found prototype of cancelled CD-i game; 1993)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario World: Mario Attack (lost Japanese arcade game; 1996)]] | |||
*[[Super Mario World (partially found early build of Super Nintendo platformer; 1989)]] | |||
*[[Super Paper Mario (lost build of unreleased original GameCube version of Wii side-scrolling platformer; 2006)]] | |||
==External Link== | |||
*[https://www.mariowiki.com/Mario's_Face_(tech_demo) Super Mario Wiki article on ''Mario's Face''.] | |||
[[Category:Lost video games]] | [[Category:Lost video games]] | ||
[[Category:Completely lost media]] |
Latest revision as of 18:49, 20 April 2023
Mario's Face was a Nintendo DS tech demo that was developed by Nintendo EAD and shown at E3 2004 to display the capabilities of Nintendo's then-new system.
The player could select Mario or Wario and then use the stylus on the touch screen, grab parts of Mario/Wario's faces, and pull and stretch them, similar to the Super Mario 64 title screen and, to a lesser degree, the Mario Party "Face Lift" minigames. This feature was also put into Super Mario 64 DS, albeit in a far simpler form.
This particular demo hasn't been shown since its E3 presentation and has not been dumped online.
Gallery
See Also
- BS Super Mario Collection (partially lost Satellaview broadcast versions of compilation platformer; 1997-1998)
- Mario Artist (lost builds of unreleased Nintendo 64DD games; 1999-2000)
- Mario's Castle (lost build of cancelled game on Nintendo's "Project Atlantis" handheld console; existence unconfirmed; 1995-1998)
- Mario Demo (lost Virtual Boy tech demo; 1994)
- Mario Motors (lost build of unreleased Nintendo DS racer; early 2000s)
- Mario Kart XXL (lost Game Boy Advance tech demo; 2004)
- Mario Takes America (lost build of cancelled Philips CD-i edutainment game; 1992-1994)
- New Super Mario Bros. (lost early builds of Nintendo DS 2D platformer; 2004-2006)
- New Super Mario Bros. Mii (lost Wii U tech demo; 2011)
- Super Mario 128 (lost build of cancelled GameCube/Wii game; 2000-2006)
- Super Mario 64 (partially found Spaceworld '95 demo of Nintendo 64 3D platformer; 1995)
- Super Mario Bros. 3 (lost Japanese prototype of NES platformer; 1987-1988)
- Super Mario Bros. (lost Commodore 64 port of NES platformer; existence unconfirmed; 1986)
- Super Mario Disk Version aka "Super Mario 64DD" (found unreleased Nintendo 64DD port of 3D platformer; 1999)
- Super Mario Galaxy (lost beta builds of Wii platformer; 2006-2007)
- Super Mario Kart R (partially found pre-release version of "Mario Kart 64"; 1995)
- Super Mario RPG 2 (lost pre-release version of "Paper Mario" Nintendo 64 role-playing game; late 1990s)
- Super Mario Spikers (lost build of cancelled Wii volleyball-wrestling sports game; 2007)
- Super Mario's Wacky Worlds (found prototype of cancelled CD-i game; 1993)
- Super Mario World: Mario Attack (lost Japanese arcade game; 1996)
- Super Mario World (partially found early build of Super Nintendo platformer; 1989)
- Super Paper Mario (lost build of unreleased original GameCube version of Wii side-scrolling platformer; 2006)